Chapter 10 Circles Notes Class 10 CBSE
Chapter 10 Circles Notes Download
Class 10 Chapter 10 Circles Notes
Circle: A circle
is a collection of all points in a plane which are at a constant distance from
a fixed point.
Centre: The fixed
point is called the centre.
Radius: The
constant distance from the centre is called the radius.
Chord: A line
segment joining any two points on a circle is called a chord.
Diameter: A chord
passing through the centre of the circle is called diameter. It is the longest
chord.
Tangent: A tangent
to a circle is a line that intersects the circle at only one point.
The tangent to a circle is perpendicular to the
radius through the point of contact.
⇒ OP ⊥ AB
Length of Tangent Segment PB and PA are normally called the lengths of tangents from outside point P.
Properties of Tangent to Circle
Theorem 1: Prove that
the tangent at any point of a circle is perpendicular to the radius through the
point of contact.
Given: XY is a tangent at point P to the circle with centre O.
To prove: OP ⊥ XY
Construction: Take a point Q on XY other than P and join OQ
Proof: If point Q lies inside the circle, then XY will become a
secant and not a tangent to the circle
OQ > OP
OP ⊥ XY …[Shortest side is the perpendicular]
Theorem 2: A line
drawn through the end point of a radius and perpendicular to it, is the tangent
to the circle.
Given: A circle C(O, r) and a line APB is perpendicular to OP,
where OP is the radius.
To prove: AB is tangent at P.
Construction: Take a point Q on the line AB, different from P and
join OQ.
Proof: Since OP ⊥ AB
OP < OQ ⇒ OQ > OP
Therefore, every point on AB, other than P, lies outside the circle.
This shows that AB meets the circle at point P.
Hence, AP is a tangent to the circle at P.
Theorem 3: Prove that
the lengths of tangents drawn from an external point to a circle are equal.
Given: PT and PS are tangents from an external point P to the circle
with centre O.
To prove: PT = PS
Construction: Join O to P, T and S.
OT = OS …[radii of the same circle]
OP = OP …[common]
∠OTP = ∠OSP …[each 90°]
∆OTP = ∆OSP …[R.H.S.]
PT = PS …[c.p.c.t.]
Note: If two
tangents are drawn to a circle from an external point, then:
·
They subtend equal angles at the centre i.e., ∠1 = ∠2.
·
They are equally inclined to the segment joining
the centre to that point i.e., ∠3 = ∠4.
∠OAP = ∠OAQ
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